Three Children of the Universe: Emerson's View of Shakespeare, Bacon, and MiltonMouton, 1966 - 199 pages |
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Page 77
... later poets , Emerson would have accepted as accurate , 129 and that his supernatural charac- ters , like Caliban , reveal the power of his imagination to create wholly new beings not patterned after anything already present in nature ...
... later poets , Emerson would have accepted as accurate , 129 and that his supernatural charac- ters , like Caliban , reveal the power of his imagination to create wholly new beings not patterned after anything already present in nature ...
Page 92
... later made his own . Frequently , however , a fairly wide disparity becomes apparent when their terms are defined and their judgments are interpreted in the light of their respective philosophical positions . A fundamental cause of this ...
... later made his own . Frequently , however , a fairly wide disparity becomes apparent when their terms are defined and their judgments are interpreted in the light of their respective philosophical positions . A fundamental cause of this ...
Page 119
... later described as intimations of " the author's author " that gave " the most pleasure in reading a book ” and “ a greater joy ” than the author himself . " He could not continue his commentary on Bacon's style because he was chiefly ...
... later described as intimations of " the author's author " that gave " the most pleasure in reading a book ” and “ a greater joy ” than the author himself . " He could not continue his commentary on Bacon's style because he was chiefly ...
Contents
Introduction | 15 |
Shakespeare as the Knower | 37 |
Bacon as the Doer | 116 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
according to Emerson American angle of vision appears beauty Ben Jonson biographical Boston character chiefly Christopher Gore Coleridge Coleridge's Composition Concord criticism Cudworth deity Doer Early Lectures edition Emerson claimed Emerson declared Emerson wrote Emerson's view English essay expressed F. O. Matthiessen fact faculties Francis Bacon genius Goethe heart Hence higher truth History of Intellect human humility Ibid idea ideal poet implied influence instinct intellect constructive intellect receptive James John Milton Journals Knower lecture on Shakespeare Letters Literary Literature London Lord Bacon manifested Margaret Fuller mind moral and religious Moral Sentiment Nantasket Beach Novum Organum opposite Paradise Lost passage perception philosopher Plato poem poet's poetic praise Proclus Ralph Waldo Emerson referred reflected representative revealed Rusk saints Samuel Taylor Coleridge Sayer scholars second lecture significant soul spirit stage Swedenborg symbol tendency things thought tion tone University Press VIII words writings